The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 9, 1978-Page 9 Sexes still to live apart at Brigham Young WASHINGTON (AP) - The gover- nment reached an agreement Thursday with Brigham Young University that permits the Mormon school in Provo, Utah, to continue to require single students residing off campus to live in housing segregated by sex. But under terms of the arrangement, landlords in Provo will be barred from reserving special sex-segregated buildings or wings of buildings if they also rent to the general public. The agreement resolves a fair- housingedispute that arose two years ago when a woman who waa not a student at Brigham Young charged that she had been denied an apartment by a landlord in Provo because of her sex. . THE COMPLAINT said the landlord refused to rent to her because the only vacancy in the building was located in an area reserved for single men. Last Feb. 28, the Justice Department notified Brigham Young and 36 lan- dlords in Provo that reserving areas for unmarried tenants of one sex violated the 1968 federal Fair Housing Act. Brigham Young requires single students to live in housing segregated by sex, based on the religious principles of the Mormon Church. The Justice Department's civil rights division said Thursday its intention all along was not to force the university to permit single, students to share apar- tments with persons of the opposite sex, but rather to assure fair housing stan- dards for non-students. THURSDAY'S agreement, the product of negotiations between the government and the university, provides that Brigham Young will ap- prove for student housing only those facilities that rent exclusively to students. As of Jan. 1, 1979, university-ap- proved landlords will be permitted to accept only single students as new tenants. To avoid hardship or inconvenience, the Justice Department said, the agreement will not force any non- students already living in university- approved housing to give up his or her apartment either now or in the future. The department said it will notify landlords in Provo of the agreement. The government said 15,000 Brigham Young students live off campus and that another 5,000 non-students rent Birth defects eforever. Unless you help. TO PROTECT THE UNBORN AND THE NEWBORN March of Dimes apartments in Provo. Department officials said the agreement is in keeping with provisions of the Fair Housing Act that permit segregation of the sexes in college dor- mitories. The agreement was signed by Assistant Attorney General Drew S. DAys III, who heads the civil rights division, and Dr. Dallin H. Oaks, president of Brigham Young. "People who, look great are great" UM stylists a tthe UNION HAROLD,.CHET, and DAVE House orders HEW budget cuts for 1979 Bell's Pizza OP, ZAf 00# WASHINGTON (AP) - The House ordered the Department of Health, Education and Welfare on Thursday to save $1 billion by reducing fraud and waste in its programs. The across-the-board reduction of HEW's proposed fiscal 1979 budget was approved by a vote of 290 to 87 as some members claimed the move stemmed from the recent victory of a California property tax cut referendum. The vote came as the House con- tinued to consider a $58 billion proposal for spending by HEW, the Labor Depar- tment and eight smaller agencies over the next year. The House bill calls for $2.4 billion for Labor and $54.3 billion for HEW. REP. DAVID OBEY, (D-Wis.), blamed the outcome on California's Proposition 13, which passed by a 2-to-1 margin and calls for a drastic lowering of property taxes. "After the victory of Proposition 13 in California, there has been near panic in this House because everyone wants to show he will be the first in America to cut spending," Obey said. "So the easy thing to do is propose a phony cut." The House amendment was spon- sored by Rep. Bob Michel, (R-Ill.), who cited a report by HEW's inspector general estimating that the department loses between $6.3 billion and $7.4 billion to waste and fraud. The amendment affects Medicaid, Medicare, Aid to Families with Depen- dent Children, Social Security, Sup- plemental Security Income, Student Assistance, elementary and secondary education aid programs. HEW WOULD have discretionary powers in deciding where the cuts should come from. The cut would also have to be accep- ted by the Senate which is writing its own version of a Labor-HEW budget. The House also declined to go along with a $233 million reduction in an educational assistance program for low- and middle-income families. Members objected to cutting the program because it was the vehicle that President Carter has chosen for of- fering an alternative to tuition tax credits. Last week, the House went against the President by opting for a tuition tax credit bill rather than Carter's plan for expanding existing educational aid programs. Senate action is pending. Rep. Ken Holland, (D-S.C.), proposed the cut in the educational aid program, suggesting the possibility of a veto if the budget was not trimmed. The Carter administration has targeted the Labor- HEW appropriations bill as a veto can- didate if it is considered too in- flationary. Gold production was at an all- time low of 16,000 fine troy ounces in 1837 and peaked at 4.9 million ounces in 1940. has fast, free delivery. Open From 11:00 a.m. FREE DELIVERY From 4:30 p.m. $ $tate & Packard f 995-0232 June is Photo Monthtake your camera with your 4 HOUR EKTACHROME SLIDES in by 9:00 a.m. or 1:00 a.m. SEE OUR YELLOW PAGES AD FOR A LIST OF OUR OTHER SERVICES "Your Local Photofinisher" 3180 Packard Ann Arbor 973-0770